Grid instability detection and power-electronics risk in South-East Europe
The ENTSO-E technical report on instability detection technologies in power-electronics-dominated systems marks a strategic inflection point for South-East Europe (SEE). […]
The ENTSO-E technical report on instability detection technologies in power-electronics-dominated systems marks a strategic inflection point for South-East Europe (SEE). […]
Guarantees of Origin became a quietly decisive layer of the January energy landscape in South-East Europe, not because they drove
Building directly on January’s observed system anatomy, the forward risk profile for South-East Europe in February–March can be framed as
January gas markets in South-East Europe behaved very differently from power, even though the two were tightly linked at the
January exposed a structural reality of South-East Europe’s power system: day-ahead prices are no longer the marginal signal of system
January crystallised a structural shift in trading risk across South-East Europe: price risk is no longer the dominant risk. The
January across South-East Europe cleared as a single, stress-tested power system whose behaviour cannot be understood by isolating fuels or
January trading across South-East Europe unfolded as a single winter-stress system rather than a mosaic of isolated national markets. Price
January 2026 marked a turning point for industrial electricity buyers across South-East Europe, not because prices were merely high, but
January 2026 made one structural reality unmistakably clear across South-East Europe: electricity prices did not diverge because markets lack generation
January’s price dynamics in South-East Europe produced a very clear redistribution of value across the electricity value chain. Elevated and
Wholesale electricity markets across South-East Europe entered January 2026 under clear winter stress, with price formation dominated by weather-driven demand,